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INDIANAPOLIS — The basketball coach for an Indiana high school standout who survived a plane crash that killed his father and stepmother said Sunday the 16-year-old is in a drug-induced coma as he struggles to recover from his injuries.

Canterbury School basketball coach Dan Kline told the Associated Press that a cousin of Austin Hatch’s father told him doctors at a northern Michigan hospital planned to bring the Fort Wayne teenager out of his coma Monday.

A spokeswoman for the hospital in Traverse City, Mich., said Austin remained in critical condition Sunday.

Friday’s crash that killed Austin’s father, Dr. Stephen Hatch and his stepmother, Kim, was the second one Austin survived. A 2003 crash killed his mother and two siblings. His father was piloting both times.

Kline said everyone at the private Canterbury School, which has about 320 students, is stunned by the news of the deadly crash and praying that Austin survives. He said it’s “unbelievable” the youngster is now the only survivor of his immediate family.

“They’re all gone,” Kline said. “He’s the only one left. What’s the chance of that happening? A million to one, if that. It’s just unbelievable.”

Austin’s maternal grandparents and his father’s cousin have been at his bedside since shortly after Friday’s crash, Kline said. His paternal grandparents and other relatives are returning from a trip to Spain and were expected to arrive Sunday afternoon.

Dr. G. David Bojrab, a colleague and close friend of Austin’s father, said Saturday the Hatches were flying to their summer home on Walloon Lake in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula, where Stephen Hatch and his brothers all owned property, when his single-engine plane flew into a garage near the Charlevoix Municipal Airport.

It was the same home Stephen Hatch and the family were returning from nearly eight years ago when they crashed in Indiana.